Room-temperature ice films can be made if water is confined and subjected to a modest electric field. Simulations have shown that strong fields of around 109 V/m can align water dipoles and crystallize them into polar cubic ice. In the new work, done in the lab of Heon Kang at Seoul National University in Korea, scientists examined the properties of room-temperature water in the gap between a gold substrate and the gold tip of a scanning tunneling microscope. They saw a sudden phase transition from liquid to solid when two conditions were met: when the gap shrank to a critical value of 7 Å and when the imposed electric field was at least a few times 106 V/m. Noting that the field is far too weak to polarize water, the researchers think they have found a new type of freezing transition. They also note that comparable field strengths...
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1 October 2005
October 01 2005
Citation
Philip F. Schewe; Room-temperature ice films. Physics Today 1 October 2005; 58 (10): 9. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4796759
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